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Ukraine rivals seek end to crisis | Ukraine rivals seek end to crisis |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A new round of crisis talks between Ukraine's feuding leaders is due to take place in the capital, Kiev. | A new round of crisis talks between Ukraine's feuding leaders is due to take place in the capital, Kiev. |
President Viktor Yushchenko has been locked in a power struggle with PM Viktor Yanukovych for several months. | President Viktor Yushchenko has been locked in a power struggle with PM Viktor Yanukovych for several months. |
The two held late-night talks on Friday amid worsening tensions, but the meeting broke up without agreement. | |
The talks come amid reports around 2,000 interior ministry troops loyal to Mr Yushchenko are trying to head towards the capital. | |
"According to our information, 82 vehicles are moving towards Kiev now with 2,050 interior troops in them," Interior Ministry deputy head Mykhaylo Korniyenko told a televised news conference. | |
They were being led by a commander loyal to Mr Yushchenko and acting in defiance of orders from the interior minister, he said. | |
But "practically all of them have been stopped in different places", AFP news agency quoted him as saying. | |
A spokesman for the troops, meanwhile, told Ukrainian television that they were going to Kiev following an order from the president to assist the State Guard Directorate. | |
Growing concern | |
The talks were due to start at 1200 (0900 GMT) but they have been delayed for several hours. | |
They come amid escalating tension between the two men and growing international concern over the crisis. | |
In pictures: Power struggle | |
On Thursday, Mr Yushchenko sacked the country's prosecutor-general, a member of Mr Yanukovych's party. | |
But Interior Minister Vasily Tsushko, who backs Mr Yanukovych, ordered riot police into the prosecutor-general's office to protect him. | |
Mr Yushchenko then said he was assuming command of the 40,000 troops controlled by the Interior Ministry, a move Mr Yanukovych condemned as unconstitutional. | |
The two men held three hours of talks on Friday, but no agreement was reached. | |
Thousands of supporters of each side are gathering in the capital and security has been stepped up. | Thousands of supporters of each side are gathering in the capital and security has been stepped up. |
Bitter rivals | |
Mr Yushchenko became president in January 2005, following the pro-democracy Orange Revolution, which overturned a rigged victory for Mr Yanukovych. | |
But Mr Yushchenko was forced to accept his rival as prime minister after his allies failed to win a majority in the March 2006 parliamentary election, and the two men have repeatedly clashed. | |
The crisis has been deepening since April, when Mr Yushchenko dissolved parliament and called a snap election, accusing his rival of using illegal methods to expand his parliamentary majority. | |
The president favours closer ties with the West, while the prime minister is seen as more pro-Russian. | |
The EU has urged both parties to settle the deepening crisis though negotiation and not resort to violence. | The EU has urged both parties to settle the deepening crisis though negotiation and not resort to violence. |